Paleontology, Geology, and Landscape

Skeleton Squadron

La Galerie de paléontologie et d’anatomie comparée, Part 1

The Gallery of Comparative Anatomy, as seen from near the entrance ...

After quite a long hiatus from posts about museum exhibits, this seemed like a good time to get back into the subject. We have visited some strange and wondrous museums in the past few months, but the strangest and most wondrous of all has to be this old museum close to the Gare d’Austerlitz in Paris.

... and from above.

The Galerie de paléontologie et d’anatomie comparée opened for the 1900 Paris world’s fair, as did many other exhibit venues. Although it was built as a new museum, it was based on fabulous old collections that had been developed in Paris during the 18th and 19th centuries. It is located in a corner of the Jardin des Plantes, which served as a royal garden prior to the French Revolution.

The Jardin des Plantes is overseen by a statue of the famous biologist J.-B.P.A. Lamarck. In the distance is the building that houses the newer Grande Galerie de l'évolution.

This place is an absolute wonder. Paris is often considered as a treasure house because of galleries such as the Louvre and the Musée d’Orsay. And of course those are amazing institutions. But this entire museum is itself a work of art, incorporating architecture, sculpture, design, and the natural architecture of skeletons, into an organic whole. It is an irreplaceable treasure, housing specimens many of which are themselves irreplaceable treasures.

Entrance side of the Galerie de paléontologie et d'anatomie comparée.

We visited during the peak of this summer’s July heatwave. This may have given us a real period feeling for the building, because of course this museum lacks modern features such as air conditioning in the galleries. We sadly had to curtail our visit due to the heat, which became more intense as we climbed to the palaeontology gallery above this one, but I was able to take many photos. What follow here are images of the lower floor of the museum, the level that is based on the comparative anatomy collections.

If you want to see more of this Paris museum, please see Ghost Giants, about the fossil vertebrates, and Life’s Dusty Attic, about fossil invertebrates.

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This is extremely interesting. I am a 10 year old boy who loves museums. After seeing this site, the Paris museum is at the top of my list to visit (one day). Thanks for all the incredible pictures. I would love to see more!

What an amazing place. I must see it. Thank you, Graham. And to Angus, I was a 10-year-old boy who loved museums too, because my parents worked in a major natural history museum. I hope that love and curiosity stays with you your whole life, as it has for me. Now I travel around doing science shows for 10-year-olds, sort of bringing a museum to them.

Thank you Richard. Richard and Angus, I was also that boy. I fell in love with the Natural History Museum when I was lucky enough to spend a year in London at the age of seven. It set me on the museum path, and as a result I have ended up working on the natural history side of a museum, and love it. It is the best possible thing to do.

I am decouvert et tres flaneur of the exhibites you showing are. These has to me caused the incredible malheureusement for les pauvres animaux the bones of him were to be disturbed and showing so embarrase.

Graham, what memories your site stirred! I first visited this museum in 1970, and was totally blown away. As a recent Zoology graduate at the time I was entranced, and felt that I could almost feel the dust from Georges Cuvier’s time sitting on the skeletons (but I must say they look much cleaner in your pix!). It truly is a marvellous ‘frozen moment in time’, and a wonderful resource for celebrating the power of evolution and the subleties of its infinite adaptations. Vive la France! A bas le ID et le ‘Creation Research’!

Mike, I similarly first visited there in 1990, and at that time they looked as though they hadn’t been dusted since your visit! Yes, they are cleaner now, but the building is otherwise very little changed. I hope to do some more posts about it when I can find some time.

I’m sure no one ever thought that we would learn so much just from a bunch of bones. I’m glad that some people don’t find this too gruesome so we can see things like this. I would love to visit this museum someday. Thank you for these pictures.

I had no idea this place existed, and would have gone when I visited Paris had I known! Thank you for posting these pictures…they’re fabulous! If I ever find my way to France again, a trip to this museum will be at the top of my list.

I visited this museum alone while in Paris with some friends (I study Geology however they didnt seem quite so eager as myself to see this place so I went on my own… In my opinion they missed out big time!) Unfortunately my camera battery died just before I got there so thank you so much for the photgraphs! Truely an amazing place and definitely somewhere you can get lost in amazement. If you have any of the paleontology section I would love to see them!
Thanks again!

These pictures are amazing! I have taken a few osteology and anatomy courses at the university level and I find these extremely interesting and fascinating. I was just recently in Paris and wish I would have known about this museum then. I am sure I will visit again though, I would even go again just to see this museum! Thank you for this!

I went to this museum about 5 years ago, when me and my mum were lost in Paris. it was the most surreal experience ever. You don’t have a picture, but i remember there being a siamese twin cat skeleton in a jar.
thats a hard image to get out of your head.
but im so glad i stumbled upon this site, i can show my mum the pictures.